Social Sharing

Based in Vancouver, Chantal Gibson is an artist, educator and poet. (Caitlin Press/Chantal Gibson)

Artist, poet and educator Chantal Gibson's How She Read is a collection of genre-blurring poems about the representation of Black women in Canada from a cultural perspective. The Vancouver-based Gibson has East Coast roots and she brings a holistic, decolonized approach to challenging imperialist ideas by way of a close look at Canadian literature, history, art, media and pop culture.

The Caiplie Caves is a poetry collection by Karen Solie. (House of Anansi/David Seymour)

The Caiplie Caves is the fifth book of poetry from award-winning poet Karen Solie. It is a portrait of sorts of an Irish missionary named Ethernan, who, in the seventh century, withdrew to a cave in Scotland to ponder whether to establish a priory on May Island or pursue a hermit's solitude. Solie adopts an intersectional look at the realities of war, religious colonization and ideas of progress, power and corruption via a personal and emotional lens of faith, grief and confusion under duress.

The debut poetry collection from Nova Scotia-raised poet Matt Walsh is a look at growing up on the East Coast and heading west on a nomadic journey. Speckled with Maritime vernacular, Walsh's poems delve into the nature of queer identity, family structure and self-determination using elements of humour, surprise and frankness.

Lambda Literary Award-winning poet and writer Leah LakshmiPiepzna-Samarasinha's latest poetry collection continues her poetic throughline of presenting perspectives and observations of working-class queer brown femme survivorhood and desire. Through Tonguebreaker, the Canadian-raised and U.S.-based poet reflects on the stakes surrounding survival in the context of the nature of love, the spectre of hate crimes, the suicides of queer kin and the rise of fascism. The collection sets forth narratives of disabled femme-of-colour moments, while dreaming of fearless femme futures to come.

Mad Long Emotion is the latest poetry collection from Ottawa-based poet Ben Ladouceur. The poems look at the nature of love and loving for humans, flora and fauna alike. Mad Long Emotion creatively gazes at the interplay between species and the host of universal connections within the natural world. Ladouceur's previous poetry collection, Otter, was a finalist for a Lambda Literary Award.

Arielle Twist is a Halifax author, poet and sex educator originally from George Gordon First Nation, Saskatchewan. (Arsenal Pulp Press/arielletwist.com)

Arielle Twist is a Cree, Two-Spirit poet and educator based in the East Coast. Twist's debut poetry collection offers perspectives of human connections after death — looking at anger, grief, trauma and displacement left in its wake. Disintegrate/Dissociate depicts life for an Indigenous trans woman, one dreaming for a hopeful future and a clear path for self-discovery.

Blythe's 2015 poetry debut,Twoism, offered stark, vibrant eroticism; Hymnswitchbuilds on that foundation to explore themes of identity and the body. Blythe brings a mastery of precision and cadence to bear in creating poems that pulse with emotion, complexity and vulnerability.

Armand Garnet Ruffo'sTREATY# is an examination of the nature and meaning of a treaty. Ruffo documents his observations of life from an Indigenous perspective, looking at belief systems and the complex, evolving connections and obligations between nation-to-nation, human-to-human and human-to-nature.

Souvankham Thammavongsa is an award-winning poet based in Toronto. (Penguin Random House/Jennifer Rowsom)

Toronto-based poet Souvankham Thammavongsa is of Thai heritage and with her fourth poetry collection examines the nature of meaning. Every poem in Cluster looks at the ways in which meaning arrives, resonates and dissipates.

Cassidy McFadzean is an award-winning poet from Regina. (Penguin Random House Canada/Sarah Bodri)

Regina-raised Cassidy McFadzean is a past finalist for the CBC Poetry Prize and The Walrus Poetry Prize. Her latest collection peers into the duality between human and beast. Drolleries is a manifesto for self-realization by way of investigating the nature of romantic relationships, the allure of art and the structures of power — from fallible and transformative angles.

This is the second poetry collection by Toronto-based poet Doyali Islam. (doyalifarahislam.com/Penguin Random House)

Doyali Islam is an award-winning poet and author based in Toronto. Heft is her second collection of poems and is a conceptual look at rupture and resilience in today's world. The poems look at the nature of illness, pain, sexuality and a society rife with surveillance practices. Heftcasts its lens on normal female sexual experience and the notion of home in light of chronic pain and suspected autoimmune illness on a personal level.

Montreal-based artist and poet Kaie Kellough plays with geography and self-determination in Magnetic Equator, his third poetry collection. Drifting between South and North America, Kellough digs into the ancestral belonging, exploring The Canadian Prairie, Georgetown, the Amazon rainforest and in the Atlantic Ocean. It looks at the nature of language and dialect in the works of Caribbean and Canadian writers, seeking origin, identity and understanding.

Adrienne Gruber's Q & A represents her third full poetry collection. The collection looks at trauma and recovery during a first pregnancy, birth of a daughter and early postpartum period. The poems cover the transformative, the grotesque and the lasting effects of bringing life into the world.

Erín Moure is a poet and translator from Calgary. (House of Anansi Press/Erín Moure)

Erín Moure is a poet and translator. The poems in The Elements is a personal examination on family built on her experience with her late father's dementia. It looks at the nature of self in an ambivalent world, drawing parallels between the struggle of Galician peasants against the invasion of the armies of Napoleon with her father's struggle with an invasive mental illness.

Kayla Czaga's sophomore collection of poetry weighs in on knowledge, experience and the fears associated with being an adult. Dunk Tank is a creative imagining of the body as an strange and unknowable landscape, breaking down the anatomical components in a blur of metaphor, imagery and dark humour to make connections between sex, love, friendship and belonging. Czaga was longlisted for the 2018 CBC Poetry Prize for Drunk River.

Iraq-born and Vancouver-based HasanNamir is an award-winning poet. His debut collection of poetry, War / Torn, looks at parameters of religion and masculinity — weighing in on the nature of identity, belonging and love. Namir examines his experience with war and violence, along with his LGTBQ identity and his relationship with tenets of Islam.

Dina Del Bucchia is an author, comedian and poet based in Vancouver. It's a Big Deal! is a humourous and honest look at personal and societies priorities, mining trends in food, clothes, culture and politics. The poetry in the collection is pointed, sincere and candid with the aim of gauging what constitutes or necessitates a 'big deal' in our 21st-century lives.

This collection of poetry from award-winning author Lee Maracle and her daughters ColumpaBobb and Tania Carter is a look at the journey of Indigenous people from colonial beginnings to reconciliation. The collaborative effort documents the personal mother-daughter connection and also the shared song of hope and reconciliation from all Indigenous communities and perspectives.

bill bissett is a Canadian poet known for his unconventional style. (Talonbooks)

The incomparable bill bissett returns with breth, a collection of new and selected works for poetry by the innovative and accomplished Toronto-based sound, visual and performance poet. brethcontinues bisset's unorthodox methods and approach to language and narrative.

When you can read it: April 25, 2019

Corrections

An earlier version of this story said that The Caiplie Caves by Karen Solie would be available on Feb. 12, 2019. The correct publication date is April 9, 2019.

Popular Now

Comments

To encourage thoughtful and respectful conversations, first and last names will appear with each submission to CBC/Radio-Canada's online communities (except in children and youth-oriented communities). Pseudonyms will no longer be permitted.

By submitting a comment, you accept that CBC has the right to reproduce and publish that comment in whole or in part, in any manner CBC chooses. Please note that CBC does not endorse the opinions expressed in comments. Comments on this story are moderated according to our Submission Guidelines. Comments are welcome while open. We reserve the right to close comments at any time.